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ANNIE M. KNOTT, CSD
The splendid monument erected at Plymouth, Mass., in memory of the Pilgrim Fathers, and completed in 1888, tells in a wonderful way what it was that inspired them to do and dare in the face of unparalleled privations and perils. On the main pedestal stands a colossal figure of Faith, holding in her left hand a Bible, while with the right uplifted she points to heaven. Beneath are four sculptured figures representing Morality, Law, Education, and Freedom. There are also many emblematic and historical figures on the monument, which help to tell the inspiring story of the founding of this Nation. One need not be ashamed to look at the monument through a mist of tears, and none should forget to be grateful for the forefathers' "sacrifices and sufferings for the cause of civil and religious liberty." Without these sacrifices and sufferings, and above all else the Pilgrims' faith in God and reverence for the Bible, how poor would be the world today! At a commemorative gathering held in Boston not long since, the Rev. Edward Everett Hale, speaking of the founders of the Nation, said, "They were idealists. They believed in God; they loved God, and as they loved Him they believed that His kingdom would certainly come. And they really meant that this town of Boston in which they lived should show all that is best in His kingdom." As Christian Scientists we see that the greatness of any people depends absolutely upon their recognition of Divine power and their obedience to Divine law. We rejoice that the true, the spiritual concept of Divine power and law has come to us in Christian Science, and that it should have come in New England is surely most fitting! That the early American ideal of freedom and of government has gone out into all the world with blessing no one denies, and that the message of Christian Science is reaching all mankind with even greater blessing is no less true, though it may not yet be so well known. Without the recognition of God's right hand this great government had not been, and only by a clear sense of God's law and obedience thereto can the Nation prosper and fulfil its glorious destiny. That this recognition of God's law and obedience to it will become universal, we do not question. The "signs" of the kingdom are too numerous for any one to doubt it. The teaching and discipline of Christian Science beget a hardihood and a superiority to the demands of the flesh which strengthen its votaries for the tests and trials encountered in pressing forward into the realm of spiritual being. Like the Pilgrims, Christian Scientists stand for "morality, law, education, and freedom" in their highest sense, and as the Bible was never absent from the deliberations of these forefathers, so do Christian Scientists find in its teachings, as illuminated by their textbook, Science and Health, guidance and inspiration for every hour; more than this, a dependence upon God so vital and far-reaching as to loosen their grasp upon material ways and means, and to lessen their fear of evil in whatever way manifested. Had the Pilgrims known as we do today the healing power of divine Truth, they would have been spared many of their saddest experiences; but nothing can rob them of the gratitude which is their need for having faithfully followed the light which they had. As our National Thanksgiving draws near, let us remember that the Pilgrim Fathers gave thanks for freedom when it was yet an unrealized ideal but little more than a glorious hope; and let us give thanks that we are realizing the fulfilment of all they looked for and prayed for, and that far beyond it all, we are coming to realize, through Mrs. Eddy's discovery of Christian Science, that infinite sense of freedom which lifts us above sin, disease, and death and enables us to commune with the Mind that governs man and the universe. In this thanksgiving all the nations of the earth may well rejoice together.
The Christian Science Journal, November, 1907 |
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